Kenya's Uhuru Kenyatta to meet UK's David Cameron

Kenya's President and ICC indictee Uhuru Kenyatta will meet UK Prime Minister David Cameron during a three-day visit to London, his office says.

A Kenyan rights group has condemned the visit - his first to a Western nation since his election in March.

The UK had said it would maintain only essential contact with Mr Kenyatta, but has invited him to London to attend a conference on the Somalia conflict.

He denies International Criminal Court charges of crimes against humanity.

The charges relate to Mr Kenyatta's alleged role in violence that killed about 1,000 people after the disputed 2007 election.

He is due to appear at the ICC for his trial in The Hague in July.

Analysis

By Karen AllenBBC News

Justice Campaigners in Kenya are calling the invitation of Uhuru Kenyatta to London a "betrayal". Yet, Kenya provides nearly 5,000 troops to Somalia and is the UK's most important strategic ally in East Africa, so a snub to Kenya's new president was always unlikely. In fact, sources suggest London has been agonising over how to get him to the event, while not "losing face".

Ndung'u Wainaina of Kenya's International Center for Policy and Conflict argues that affording diplomatic courtesies to Kenya's new leader "betrays the agenda" of the Somali conference - to root out impunity and insecurity which lie at the heart of Somalia's troubles.

The UK would argue otherwise. This is the first indication of what it considers to be "essential contact" with the indicted leader, a term which is likely to be open to wide interpretation, depending on the political circumstances.

The official UK line is that Kenya is "co-operating" with the International Criminal Court, and it was "right that Kenya should be represented at the conference". But behind the scenes diplomats and intelligence officials from both sides are said to have had high level talks to secure Mr Kenyatta's invitation to London whilst not sending out mixed messages about the ICC.

It follows an election which saw relations between Mr Kenyatta's supporters and the UK strained and anti-foreigner sentiment whipped up on a scale not seen since independence.

For Kenya's new president the fact that he has a troublesome neighbour (Somalia) and Kenya is a key player in the "global war on terror" could be his trump cards.

'Losing face'

Mr Kenyatta beat then-Prime Minister Raila Odinga by 50.07% to 43.28% in the March election.

In a statement, Mr Kenyatta's office said he had arrived in London on Monday morning.

"During the visit, President Kenyatta will attend the London conference on Somalia and also hold bilateral meetings with UK Prime Minister David Cameron and other UK government officials," it added.

The executive director of Kenya's International Center for Policy and Conflict lobby group, Ndung'u Wainaina, said the invitation to Mr Kenyatta "betrays the agenda" of the Somalia conference, which is to root out impunity and insecurity.

The BBC's Karen Allen says the UK had been agonising about how to invite Mr Kenyatta without losing face after warning before the election that it would have only "essential contact" with him if he was voted into power.